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Ipad Pro Audio Out Usb C

If you have a higher-wattage USB-C power adapter—such as the one that came with your Mac laptop—you can use it with your iPad for faster charging. You can connect iPad to your Mac or PC to charge the device or sync content using iTunes or the Finder. One example is the mophie USB-A Cable with USB-C Connector; many other USB-certified brands available in your country or region might also work. The USB-C port on your iPad connects to external displays so that you can watch video, play Keynote presentations, and more on a larger screen.

Your iPad uses the DisplayPort protocol to support connections to USB-C displays1 with these resolutions: Your iPad matches the frame rate and dynamic range of currently playing content when you turn on Allow Display Mode Changes.

The Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter is also compatible with iPad. * When you use the Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter with your iPad, its Home Screen and apps appear on HDMI displays at 1080p and 60Hz. Turn on the Match Content option on your iPad in Settings > Displays.

To play audio on your iPad, you can use its built-in speakers, connect to AirPods or other Bluetooth devices, or use AirPlay.

* For example, you can connect a digital camera or the Apple USB-C to SD Card Reader to import photos. Some accessories can request higher power from your iPad, which might affect battery life.

To extend battery life, remember to disconnect these accessories from iPad Pro when you aren’t using them. Away from a power outlet and need to charge your iPhone, other iPad, Apple Watch, or third-party USB device? Just connect the right cable or adapter to your iPad to share its long-lasting battery with your other devices: If you have an Apple Watch Magnetic Fast Charger to USB-C Cable, you can connect it directly to your iPad.

* Data transmission speed varies depending on the model of your iPad and whether it’s connected to a computer or to another device.

iPad Pro – Spesifikasi Teknis

Inggris (Australia, Inggris, AS), Tionghoa (Sederhana, Tradisional, Tradisional – Hong Kong), Prancis (Kanada, Prancis), Jerman, Italia, Jepang, Korea, Spanyol (Amerika Latin, Spanyol), Arab, Bulgaria, Katalan, Kroasia, Ceko, Denmark, Belanda, Finlandia, Yunani, Ibrani, Hindi, Hungaria, Indonesia, Kazakh, Melayu, Norwegia, Polandia, Portugis (Brasil, Portugal), Rumania, Rusia, Slovakia, Swedia, Thai, Turki, Ukraina, Vietnam Inggris (Australia, Kanada, India, Jepang, Selandia Baru, Singapura, Afrika Selatan, Inggris, AS), Tionghoa – Sederhana (Tulisan Tangan, Pinyin QWERTY, Pinyin 10 Key, Shuangpin, Stroke), Tionghoa – Tradisional (Cangjie, Tulisan Tangan, Pinyin QWERTY, Pinyin 10 Key, Shuangpin, Stroke, Sucheng, Zhuyin), Prancis (Belgia, Kanada, Prancis, Swiss), Jerman (Austria, Jerman, Swiss), Italia, Jepang (Kana, Romaji), Korea (2-Set, 10 Key), Spanyol (Amerika Latin, Meksiko, Spanyol), Ainu, Albania, Amhar, Apache (Western), Arab, Arab (Najdi), Armenia, Assam, Asiria, Azerbaijan, Bengali, Belarusia, Bodo, Bulgaria, Burma, Kanton – Tradisional (Cangjie, Tulisan Tangan, Fonetik, Stroke, Sucheng), Katalan, Cherokee, Kroasia, Ceko, Denmark, Dhivehi, Dogri, Belanda, Dzongkha, Emoji, Estonia, Faroe, Filipina, Finlandia, Flemish, Fula (Adlam), Georgia, Yunani, Gujarati, Hawaii, Ibrani, Hindi (Devanagari, Latin, Transliterasi), Hungaria, Islandia, Igbo, Indonesia, Gaelic Irlandia, Kannada, Kashmir (Arab, Devanagari), Kazakh, Khmer, Konkani (Devanagari), Kurdi (Arab, Latin), Kirgiz, Lao, Latvia, Lituania, Makedonia, Maithili, Melayu (Arab, Latin), Malayalam, Malta, Manipuri (Bengali, Meetei Mayek), Māori, Marathi, Mongolia, Navajo, Nepal, Norwegia (Bokmål, Nynorsk), Odia, Pashtun, Persia, Persia (Afganistan), Polandia, Portugis (Brasil, Portugal), Punjabi, Rohingya, Rumania, Rusia, Samoa, Sanskerta, Santali (Devanagari, Ol Chiki), Serbia (Sirilik, Latin), Sindhi (Arab, Devanagari), Sinhala, Slovakia, Slovenia, Swahili, Swedia, Tajik, Tamil (Anjal, Tamil 99), Telugu, Thai, Tibet, Tonga, Turki, Turkmen, Ukraina, Urdu, Uighur, Uzbek (Arab, Sirilik, Latin), Vietnam (Telex, VIQR, VNI), Wales, Yiddi

Inggris (Australia, Kanada, India, Jepang, Singapura, Afrika Selatan, Inggris, AS), Tionghoa (Sederhana, Tradisional), Prancis (Belgia, Kanada, Prancis, Swiss), Jerman (Austria, Jerman, Swiss), Italia, Jepang, Korea, Spanyol (Amerika Latin, Meksiko, Spanyol), Arab, Arab (Najdi), Kanton (Tradisional), Belanda, Hindi (Devanagari, Latin), Portugis (Brasil, Portugal), Rusia, Swedia, Thai, Turki, Vietnam Inggris (Australia, Kanada, India, Irlandia, Malaysia, Selandia Baru, Filipina, Arab Saudi, Singapura, Afrika Selatan, UEA, Inggris, AS), Kanton (Tiongkok daratan, Hong Kong), Tionghoa Mandarin (Tiongkok daratan, Taiwan), Prancis (Belgia, Kanada, Prancis, Luksemburg, Swiss), Jerman (Austria, Jerman, Swiss), Italia (Italia, Swiss), Jepang, Korea, Spanyol (Cile, Kolombia, Meksiko, Spanyol, AS), Portugis (Brasil, Portugal), Arab (Kuwait, Qatar, Arab Saudi, UEA), Katalan, Kroasia, Ceko, Denmark, Belanda (Belgia, Belanda), Finlandia, Yunani, Ibrani, Hindi, Hungaria, Indonesia, Melayu, Norwegia (Bokmål), Polandia, Rumania, Rusia, Shanghai (Tiongkok daratan), Slovakia, Swedia, Thai, Turki, Ukraina, Vietnam

Inggris (Australia, Kanada, India, Jepang, Selandia Baru, Singapura, Afrika Selatan, Inggris, AS), Prancis (Belgia, Kanada, Prancis, Swiss), Jerman (Austria, Jerman, Swiss), Italia, Spanyol (Amerika Latin, Meksiko, Spanyol), Arab, Arab (Najdi), Bulgaria, Ceko, Denmark, Belanda (Belanda, Belgia), Finlandia, Yunani, Hindi (Devanagari), Hungaria, Gaelic Irlandia, Norwegia (Bokmål, Nynorsk), Polandia, Portugis (Brasil, Portugal), Punjabi, Rumania, Rusia, Swedia, Telugu, Turki, Vietnam Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarusia, Belgia, Brasil, Bulgaria, Kanada, Tiongkok daratan, Kolombia, Kosta Rika, Kroasia, Siprus, Republik Ceko, Denmark, Estonia, Kepulauan Faroe, Finlandia, Prancis, Georgia, Jerman, Yunani, Greenland, Guernsey, Hong Kong, Hungaria, Islandia, Irlandia, Pulau Man, Israel, Italia, Jepang, Jersey, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lituania, Luksemburg, Makau, Malaysia, Malta, Meksiko, Moldova, Monako, Montenegro, Belanda, Selandia Baru, Norwegia, Palestina, Peru, Polandia, Portugal, Qatar, Rumania, Rusia, San Marino, Arab Saudi, Serbia, Singapura, Slovakia, Slovenia, Afrika Selatan, Spanyol, Swedia, Swiss, Taiwan, Inggris, Ukraina, Uni Emirat Arab, AS, Kota Vatikan

USB-C audio and the iPad Pro: Everything you need to know

Apple ditched the 3.5mm headphone jack on the iPhone long ago and for years we heard (often literally!) If you’re into electronics and love getting down and dirty, know that the iPad Pro (both sizes) uses USB 3.1 (Generation 2) for data communication and an industry standard Type-C interface. That means 10Gbps communication speeds, is 100w bi-directional USB-PD (Power Delivery) capable and uses the USB Audio version 3.0 specification. That means they are a bunch of binary (a counting system that only uses zero and one) bits that are packed together so the iPad or any other device that can store digital music) can read them and know what to do with them.

There are some pretty cool things that scientists and engineers can do to “make” sound, but every portable digital audio player and every set of speakers need this process. All of this matters because a USB-C port is capable of streaming that raw digital data out to another device for decoding, conversion, and amplification.

The Lightning port could send raw digital data, but not in tandem with another process and at half the speed. There are two ways to send audio data through the USB-C port, and I’ll bet you can guess them: Analog and digital. Analog audio can be converted with an onboard DAC and amplifier inside the iPad Pro then sent out through the port to a passive set of headphones or an adapter.

For this to work, the iPad is using what’s called “audio accessory mode” and the headphones or adapter are just “dumb” connections that pass along the signal like the old 3.5mm sets did. If you are using an active set of headphones or adapter, your iPad will know and send digital audio out through the port. That can make buying headphones an adventure, and not the fun kind with pirates and fancy clothing.

This will be printed on the box, but if you don’t see it there be sure to ask someone who knows or is able to refund your money if they give the wrong answer. This uses some of the wires in the USB connection for direct device-to-host transmission of alternate data protocols; as of 2016 this includes DisplayPort, Mobile High-Definition Link, and HDMI. That means you can do a lot more with the USB-C port on your iPad Pro than listen to music or charge it if Apple and the company making whatever is being plugged in decides to include any of these extra modes. Some are great — HDMI or DisplayPort through the Alternate mode specification means you can connect your iPad Pro to a monitor or to an AV Receiver for premium sound while you mirror the screen. Android, along with Chrome OS, Windows, macOS, and Linux all fully support the USB Type-C connection specifications. While the audio won’t necessarily sound better because it’s using the USB-C port, there are a lot of cool things that can be done while we are listening.

I remember when my Tangerine iMac came in and had USB ports and all I could find to plug into them were a crummy-sounding pair of speakers. Of course, wireless headphones will work just like they always have, and the conspiracy theory that Apple wants everyone to buy $159 Airpods is partially true.

Apple would love for you to buy Airpods, but what the company envisions is that most people will move to wireless headphones for the convenience, while wired audio will be there for folks who need to use special tools or demand higher-quality music. As someone who is primarily an Android user (but I do love my red iPhone 8) seeing an iPad with a USB-C port is awesome because only Apple has the brand power to move an industry. When Apple enters the picture, manufacturers know they can make money if they build products that work exactly as expected.

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